Simultaneous Transfemoral Endovascular Procedures for Aortic
Valve Replacement (TAVI) and Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
(PCI) in Old Patients With Aortic Valve Atherosclerotic Stenosis
(AVAS) and Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)
Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of simultaneous TAVI and coronary stenting in elderly and old patients with
AVAS and CAD at high surgical risk.
Methods: The study comprised 121 patients who underwent TAVI. They were assigned to two groups: I – patients
who underwent TAVI with simultaneous coronary stenting (n = 30); II – patients with AVAS without severe stenotic
changes in the coronary arteries. They underwent only TAVI (n = 91). The in-hospital period and the mid-term
results have been studied.
Results: The success of simultaneous TAVI and PCI was 100%. There were no intra- or perioperative deaths, acute
myocardial infarction, acute brain stroke, or acute renal failure requiring dialysis. During the 6-month follow-up,
one patient died from cancer. There were no other serious complications. The left bundle branch block occurred in
23.3% of cases and regurgitation (leakage) on the aortic valve in 6.6% of cases.
Conclusion: Simultaneous TAVI and coronary stenting in elderly and old patients with severe aortic stenosis and
CAD are feasible and safe. Within the first 30 days after the procedure, there were no significant differences in
mortality and severe complication rates between the two groups.
%0 Journal Article
%1 noauthororeditor
%A Iosseliani, David
%D 2022
%J BOHR International Journal of Research on Cardiology and Cardiovascular Diseases (BIJRCCD)
%K Aortic stenosis
%N 03
%P 18-27
%R https://doi.org/10.54646/bijrccd.003
%T Simultaneous Transfemoral Endovascular Procedures for Aortic
Valve Replacement (TAVI) and Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
(PCI) in Old Patients With Aortic Valve Atherosclerotic Stenosis
(AVAS) and Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)
%U https://bohrpub.com/article/BIJRCCD-20221103.pdf
%V 1
%X Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of simultaneous TAVI and coronary stenting in elderly and old patients with
AVAS and CAD at high surgical risk.
Methods: The study comprised 121 patients who underwent TAVI. They were assigned to two groups: I – patients
who underwent TAVI with simultaneous coronary stenting (n = 30); II – patients with AVAS without severe stenotic
changes in the coronary arteries. They underwent only TAVI (n = 91). The in-hospital period and the mid-term
results have been studied.
Results: The success of simultaneous TAVI and PCI was 100%. There were no intra- or perioperative deaths, acute
myocardial infarction, acute brain stroke, or acute renal failure requiring dialysis. During the 6-month follow-up,
one patient died from cancer. There were no other serious complications. The left bundle branch block occurred in
23.3% of cases and regurgitation (leakage) on the aortic valve in 6.6% of cases.
Conclusion: Simultaneous TAVI and coronary stenting in elderly and old patients with severe aortic stenosis and
CAD are feasible and safe. Within the first 30 days after the procedure, there were no significant differences in
mortality and severe complication rates between the two groups.
@article{noauthororeditor,
abstract = {Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of simultaneous TAVI and coronary stenting in elderly and old patients with
AVAS and CAD at high surgical risk.
Methods: The study comprised 121 patients who underwent TAVI. They were assigned to two groups: I – patients
who underwent TAVI with simultaneous coronary stenting (n = 30); II – patients with AVAS without severe stenotic
changes in the coronary arteries. They underwent only TAVI (n = 91). The in-hospital period and the mid-term
results have been studied.
Results: The success of simultaneous TAVI and PCI was 100%. There were no intra- or perioperative deaths, acute
myocardial infarction, acute brain stroke, or acute renal failure requiring dialysis. During the 6-month follow-up,
one patient died from cancer. There were no other serious complications. The left bundle branch block occurred in
23.3% of cases and regurgitation (leakage) on the aortic valve in 6.6% of cases.
Conclusion: Simultaneous TAVI and coronary stenting in elderly and old patients with severe aortic stenosis and
CAD are feasible and safe. Within the first 30 days after the procedure, there were no significant differences in
mortality and severe complication rates between the two groups.
},
added-at = {2023-01-28T14:30:21.000+0100},
author = {Iosseliani, David},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c943872159e0b06724b12bbb2bc3e4a7/bijrccdjournal},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.54646/bijrccd.003},
interhash = {ed7ee47157eea7092e9c2ed7f6de662e},
intrahash = {c943872159e0b06724b12bbb2bc3e4a7},
journal = {BOHR International Journal of Research on Cardiology and Cardiovascular Diseases (BIJRCCD)},
keywords = {Aortic stenosis},
language = {English},
month = {October},
number = 03,
pages = {18-27},
timestamp = {2023-01-28T14:30:21.000+0100},
title = {Simultaneous Transfemoral Endovascular Procedures for Aortic
Valve Replacement (TAVI) and Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
(PCI) in Old Patients With Aortic Valve Atherosclerotic Stenosis
(AVAS) and Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)
},
url = {https://bohrpub.com/article/BIJRCCD-20221103.pdf},
volume = 1,
year = 2022
}